Optical fiber probe spectroscopy for laparoscopic monitoring of tissue oxygenation during esophagectomies. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Anastomotic complication is a major morbidity associated with esophagectomy. Gastric ischemia after conduit creation contributes to anastomotic complications, but a reliable method to assess oxygenation in the gastric conduit is lacking. We hypothesize that fiber optic spectroscopy can reliably assess conduit oxygenation, and that intraoperative gastric ischemia will correlate with the development of anastomotic complications. A simple optical fiber probe spectrometer is designed for nondestructive laparoscopic measurement of blood content and hemoglobin oxygen saturation in the stomach tissue microvasculature during human esophagectomies. In 22 patients, the probe measured the light transport in stomach tissue between two fibers spaced 3-mm apart (500- to 650-nm wavelength range). The stomach tissue site of measurement becomes the site of a gastroesophageal anastamosis following excision of the cancerous esophagus and surgical ligation of two of the three gastric arteries that provide blood perfusion to the anastamosis. Measurements are made at each of five steps throughout the surgery. The resting baseline saturation is 0.51±0.15 and decreases to 0.35±0.20 with ligation. Seven patients develop anastomotic complications, and a decreased saturation at either of the last two steps (completion of conduit and completion of anastamosis) is predictive of complication with a sensitivity of 0.71 when the specificity equaled 0.71.

publication date

  • January 1, 2010

Research

keywords

  • Esophagectomy
  • Esophagus
  • Fiber Optic Technology
  • Laparoscopes
  • Oximetry
  • Oxygen
  • Spectrophotometry, Infrared

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC3000858

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 79955976645

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1364/AO.46.004828

PubMed ID

  • 21198160

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 15

issue

  • 6